That is a lot of Red Coats!
“One With Britain, Heart and Soul, One Life, One Flag, One Throne!” A Large Group Portrait of the Soldiers of the British Empire (1898)
“We don’t want to fight but by Jingo if we do/ We’ve got the ships, we’ve got the men, we’ve got the money too!
In this article, Dr. Will Dabbs discusses why he carries a firearm for self-defense. The article includes discussing a real person with a serious mental illness. Real names have not been used. Nothing in this narrative is intended to disparage or stigmatize those who might suffer from any medical condition. However, it is a dangerous world. It behooves one to face potential danger with his or her eyes open to the risks they might face.
Crazy is a lyrically overused term these days. Psychiatrists institutionally despise that word. Labels are passe in today’s enlightened society. Such antiquated terminology invariably foments subconscious bias.
What most people mean when they use the word “crazy” is psychosis. Distilled to its essence, this just means disconnected from reality. People with schizophrenia, for example, typically hear voices or, more rarely, see things that are objectively not real. The age of onset is typically late teens or early twenties. The experience is uniformly horrifying for all involved, particularly the patient.
The overwhelming majority of folks who develop such maladies are utterly harmless. They might make you feel a little bit weird when first you meet. However, once you get to know them, in my experience they are people just like the rest of us. In fact, I’ve found that schizophrenics and folks with notable bipolar disorder are often a bit more artistic and creative than the rest of us. AntiSocial Personality Disorder (ASPD), by contrast, reflects an inability to empathize with the suffering of others.
One cute little blonde-headed kid I met in the hospital with ASPD looked perfectly normal. However, he came to us because he had spontaneously stabbed his foster mother in the thigh with a pencil. Thankfully, such extreme psychopathy is fairly rare. However, it is in those rare outliers where the real danger can be found.
Arnold Eats a Hypodermic Needle
I met the subject of this article in the ER of a large metropolitan trauma center. Let’s call him “Frank.” He was 25 years old. At first impressions, Frank was incredibly imposing. I would guess he was maybe six feet one and weighed perhaps 210 pounds without a gram of extraneous body fat. This guy was built like Arnold Schwarzenegger circa 1984. He was a simply incredible specimen.
Frank’s family had brought him to the ER because he was acting strangely at home. In the presence of a nurse, he proceeded to swallow a drywall screw along with a hypodermic needle he had retrieved from a sharps container. This bought him a ticket to the lockdown psych ward.
Frank was engaging and articulate, if a bit strange. I inquired regarding his story, and he was quite forthright. Frank ultimately taught me quite a lot. One of the things he taught me was that I should never leave the house without a gun. Let me explain.
Talking to Demons
When Frank was a teenager he developed an insatiable interest in the occult. He said he read rapaciously on the subject and subsequently began actively praying to Satan. When the time was right, he said he asked the Prince of Darkness to send him some company. At the time of our meeting, Frank said his head played home to three entities — Dagon, Demidagon, and Begorred. He said one of the three talked to him all the time.
Frank eventually took a job in a rough part of town. One day he was strolling past a group of four males just listening to his three demons having a confab. One of the three, I forget which, directed his attention to the four men. Let’s assume it was Dagon.
Dagon pointed out one man in particular for attention. He told Frank that he needed to “do something” about that guy. When Frank pushed back, Dagon explained that, if he failed to “do something,” then the man might hurt somebody. Frank explained that he didn’t care. Dagon said failure to intervene meant that this gentleman would actually hurt Frank.
My new friend then walked up to a total stranger and killed him because the voices in his head told him to do so.
Unsettling Thoughts…
Frank spent the next several years in prison. As near as I could tell, all he did for those years was lift weights. He had been released some 30 days before we met. He stopped taking his medications, and, before you know it, was snarfing hypodermic needles in the ER. As an aside, the needle and the screw passed of their own accord without further intervention. The human body is a simply breathtaking machine.
The following morning I returned to his room, this time at the head of a train of nursing students, PT students, and sundry straphangers. Of the nine of us who went into Frank’s room, I was, incongruously, the only physician and the sole male. We were arrayed in a line with me being farthest from the door. Frank was sitting up in bed shirtless with the sheet pulled up to his waist. As I mentioned, he was jacked like an absolute beast.
Once we filed in, Frank suddenly shouted at everybody to stop. To use a tired metaphor, time momentarily stood still. I didn’t know if he was about to kill and eat me, the girls, or some random sampling. He put his hands together in a strangely unnatural way and indexed to each of us one at a time, twirling his mitts rhythmically in our direction. Once he completed this exercise he smiled and pleasantly asked what he could do for us. I naturally asked him what exactly it was that he had just done.
Explaining as he might to a child, Frank said he knew we were coming to visit that morning. He elaborated that, the night before, he had moved all the furniture aside before drawing a big pentagram on the floor with soap. He said this was designed to keep us safe while we were with him in his room. When he realized that the soap pentagram was invisible, he made do with this weird individual counter-curse hand thing. I thanked him for both the explanation and the effort.
The Mental Health and Medical Intervention Problem
Inpatient facilities for the mentally ill are incredibly expensive. By contrast, anti-psychotic drugs are relatively cheap. In their defense, these medications do typically work quite well…if you take them as you should. In Frank’s case, he explained that the voices in his head would direct him to stop his medications from time to time when they needed him to “think clearly.” Just such a chain of events had brought him to the hospital that evening.
Rare, But Real…
Frank was a nice kid with a really bad disease. The overwhelming majority of those similarly afflicted are quite incapable of the sorts of violence that bought Frank several years in the state pen. Fortunately, Frank remained peaceful and calm when we interacted with him. I fear what might have happened if he had not.
Those of us fortunate enough not to carry such a weighty burden should take great care not to stigmatize those who do. However, for that rare minority who do embrace the darkness, I pack a gun. Until and unless they do something that brings them into the light, these folks do indeed walk among us. I feel it’s simply sound policy for me to be prepared if I must face a deadly and unavoidable threat.
Why I Love .32 ACP by Travis Pike
I love the .32 ACP cartridge. I’ve written a fair bit about it, but I’m not sure if I’ve ever explained exactly why I love this little round so much. There are quite a few reasons, and they aren’t all necessarily practical. As an acolyte of the “One True Caliber” cult, I figured I could proselytize to the masses as commanded by John Moses Browning.
Pocket Pistol Perfect
If you’re looking for the absolute smallest, lightest, and thinnest semi-auto handguns that remain comfortable to shoot, then you need to look at the .32 ACP. The KelTec P32 wins the award for lightest and thinnest, coming in at 0.75 inches wide and 6.6 ounces. Meanwhile, the Seecamp is the shortest in both height and overall length.
Both lend themselves well to deep concealment. When it comes to pocket-sized guns, you have to find the right compromise between control and concealability, and the .32 ACP gives you exactly that. In these super-small platforms, it remains pleasant to shoot and is capable of rapid follow-up shots.

Outside of the Smith & Wesson Bodyguard 2.0, I cannot think of any pocket-sized .380 ACP that is remotely pleasant to shoot. Dealing with recoil isn’t an issue until it affects performance, and I simply cannot shoot as fast or as accurately with a Ruger LCP as I can with a P32.
With the right European-loaded round, penetration isn’t an issue either. The round gets deep enough to hit vitals, though counting on expansion might be a bridge too far.
Historical Relevance
The .32 ACP was the first cartridge created by John Browning, and it was designed for the FN M1900, which was the first production pistol to use a slide. It was also the first truly successful semi-auto pistol cartridge.
The .32 ACP continued to appear in historically relevant guns during significant world events. This includes the French military’s heavy use of Ruby pistols in World War I.

Later, the OSS and British SOE used the cartridge, most notably in the always-fascinating Welrod pistol. Furthermore, U.S. General Officers were frequently issued Colt M1903s chambered in .32 ACP.
The round spread like wildfire and was one of the few cartridges equally popular in both the West and behind the Soviet Iron Curtain. This led to its widespread adoption by military and police forces around the world, as well as civilian shooters.

Historical gun enthusiasts have plenty of affordable .32 ACP options today. VZ 70s and Zastava M70s are common points of entry for enthusiasts and can often be found for under $300.
The Guns Rule
To put it plainly, most .32 ACP handguns are either interesting pistols or decent performers. While the market was a bit muddled by cheap “Ring of Fire” guns, the majority of .32s are, at the very least, fascinating.
Guns like the Remington Model 51, the Savage M1907, and the Colt M1903 are all sleek, excellent shooters. The hesitation-lock delay of the Model 51 and the double-stack magazine of the M1907 are brilliant pieces of small-arms history.
We also have the iconic Walther PP and PPK, alongside the Beretta Model 70, 81, and Tomcat. Sure, a lot of these guns were also offered in .380 ACP, but the .32 ACP variants are much more pleasant to shoot.

Guns like the Zastava M70 might be considered ugly by some, but they are distinctly unique. I prefer to call them “interesting.” The same could be said about the CZ 83, the Walther Model 4, and the Mauser HSc.
One of my personal favorites remains the VZ 61 Škorpión. I’m currently waiting for my ATF tax stamp to clear so I can finally turn mine into a short-barreled rifle (SBR). I really can’t wait to try it at a Steel Challenge match if they let me compete in the PCC (Pistol Caliber Carbine) division.

If you’re bored with the typical “black rectangle on top of a black rectangle” defining modern polymer gun design, the .32 ACP might quench your thirst. Outside of the KelTec P32, most modern and surplus .32s are mechanical works of art.
Suppressed Giggles
If you like shooting suppressed, you owe it to yourself to shoot some .32 ACP through a silencer, preferably on an incredibly small gun. Shooting a Walther suppressed is a blast, but one of the most entertaining hosts is by far the Beretta 30X or 3032 Tomcat.
Something about shooting a micro-sized gun with a suppressor larger than the firearm itself is effortlessly entertaining. The .32 ACP round suppresses beautifully, even through a standard 9mm can. It’s downright hearing-safe and offers negligible recoil.

Because most standard .32 ACP rounds are inherently subsonic, there is no supersonic crack to worry about. The round itself already has a low powder volume, and most of the available handguns utilize a straight-blowback design with fixed barrels. This means you don’t need to worry about a booster (Nielsen device) or reliability issues.
When you shoot it, you instantly understand why they picked this cartridge for the Welrod way back when.
Downsides?
Obviously, no cartridge is perfect. The biggest downside is price. The little .32 ACP typically commands a premium at the gun counter. There have been some great sales in the past, like Norma for $17 a box or S&B surplus for around $12 per 50 rounds, but those are the exceptions to the rule. You will most commonly spend $25 to $30 for a standard box of ammo.
Additionally, the .32 ACP is a semi-rimmed cartridge. When loaded into a magazine, you can occasionally run into “rimlock.” This most commonly happens with hollow points because their shorter overall length allows them to shift forward and backward inside the magazine.

So, not all is perfect in the land of the One True Caliber. For me, it’s a trade-off I’m happy to make. I don’t use hollow points because heavier FMJ .32s are usually required to get the desired penetration anyway, which completely eliminates the rimlock issue. I also make sure to stock up whenever a good online sale comes around.
While the downsides are worth mentioning, I can’t help but adore the .32 ACP.
